Many see Abrams as a potential presidential or vice presidential candidate and believe the sky is the limit, but she appears to have closed the door on a 2020 run.

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If she runs against Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.), Democrats think they’d have a chance to win a Senate seat in a state that hasn’t elected a Democrat to the chamber in nearly two decades and loosen Republicans’ tight grip on the South.

Abrams’s State of the Union response gave her the largest national platform since narrowly losing Georgia’s hotly contested gubernatorial race in November.

In her speech, Abrams made appeals for unity and bipartisanship in what she described as “a time of division and crisis.”

She also took aim at Trump for sowing those divisions and orchestrating a partial government shutdown that left hundreds of thousands of federal employees without paychecks for weeks.

Trump shot back on Wednesday in his first public comments about Abrams since her rebuttal, calling her potential Senate bid against Perdue a “mistake.”

“I don’t think she can win,” Trump told regional reporters in an Oval Office interview on Wednesday, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

But the calls for Abrams, 45, to run for Senate have only amplified in recent weeks as Democrats see a path to taking back the upper chamber in 2020. Republicans have a 53-47 majority, and Democrats see their path to victory running through Georgia.

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Abrams would almost certainly enter the Senate race as a front-runner among Democrats. Her 2018 campaign for governor elevated her to national prominence and helped boost her name recognition in Georgia.

What’s more, she has already proven herself to be an adept fundraiser, having raked in more than $27 million for her gubernatorial bid. That fundraising ability will be vital to take on Perdue, who ended 2018 with roughly $1.7 million in his campaign coffers, according to his most recent federal filings.

Abrams made history last year as the first African-American woman to win a gubernatorial nomination for either major party. Her candidacy energized the increasingly diverse Democratic electorate that helped propel dozens of the party’s candidates to victories last year.

Despite her narrow loss to now-Gov. Brian Kemp (R) in November, Abrams has maintained a presence in politics. Shortly after as she ended her gubernatorial bid, she launched a new organization, Fair Fight Georgia, focused on fighting voter suppression. And last month, she announced a statewide “Thank You” tour.

Abrams and her allies accused Kemp, who oversaw the state’s elections as Georgia’s secretary of state while he was running for governor, of engaging in voter suppression. The Republican has vehemently denied that. And in her speech, Abrams addressed voter suppression head on, calling it the “next battle for our democracy.”

Abrams is expected to make a decision on her political future by the end of March — a decision eagerly awaited by many Democrats.

“It’s all anyone is talking about here: What is she going to do next?” Rebecca DeHart, the executive director of the Georgia Democratic Party, said. “I think the world is her oyster.”

“Will she run for governor? Will she run for Senate? Hell, I’d be happy if she ran for president,” DeHart added. “She’s got a heck of a decision in front of her.”

A few months ago, some Georgia Democrats believed Abrams was leaning in the direction of a gubernatorial rematch with Kemp in 2022.

But lately, they believe a Senate run is becoming more of a possibility.

“I think the things she wants to manage you do by being governor,” said DuBose Porter, a former chairman of the Georgia Democratic Party who was with Abrams Tuesday night in Atlanta for her rebuttal.

“I think as things have evolved, she certainly has the momentum. Every option is very much on the table now.”

Hours before Abrams’s rebuttal on Tuesday, Sarah Riggs Amico, the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in Georgia last year, launched a fundraising campaign on the website Crowdpac to raise money for a potential bid for higher office by Abrams.

“There’s no better time to let her know that we’ll support her if she runs again,” Riggs Amico wrote on the Crowdpac page. “That’s why I’m launching a campaign to draft Stacey Abrams to run for federal office in 2020. For what? I’ll leave that decision up to her.”

Changing demographics and an influx of new residents from the northeast and Midwest, especially in Atlanta and its suburbs, have nudged Georgia into more favorable territory for Democrats in recent years and fueled the party’s hopes of turning the state into a political battleground.

While Abrams fell short in the governor’s race, Democrats flipped one House seat in the Atlanta suburbs and came close to winning another in a neighboring district, highlighting how the evolving demographics and frustration for Trump in the suburbs has swayed traditionally Republican-leaning areas.

“Georgia is now a battleground state. With Abrams giving the response, that creates the possibility for a Senate run and shows that Georgia is in the pathway equation to 270,” said Tharon Johnson, a Democratic strategist based in Georgia.

Perdue, 69, won a crowded GOP primary as a political outsider and was able to self-fund. The general election in 2014 captured national attention, but he defeated one of Democrats’ top recruits, nonprofit CEO Michelle Nunn, by an 8-point margin. Two years later, Trump went on to win Georgia by an even narrower 6-point margin.

Perdue, a businessman before his time in politics, has been a close ally of the president. Following Trump’s address, Perdue lauded his work over the past two years while also calling for “bipartisan solutions” to address health care, immigration and infrastructure.

“While we heard a positive message from President Trump, Democrats sat on their hands. There is a stark contrast between the positive results we’ve seen under President Trump and Democrats’ radical policies that have been proven to fail,” Perdue said in a Tuesday night statement.

Perdue has confirmed that he’s running for reelection in 2020 and said in a December interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he sees himself as “the outsider in the belly of the beast.”